From the Center for Lifelong Learning At Northwest State Community College
Early Summer-June 2016 An Affiliate of the Road Scholar Institutes Cecily Rohrs, Coordinator
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Now we Know! Immigration Program – Excellent!
Now we know! When a discussion turns to illegal immigrants the next
question is: “Why don’t they just do it legally?” After our day-long gath-
ering at the College on Friday, April 8th we now know the answer! It costs
a lot of money and there are many, time-consuming waits. We learned
some immigrants who are waiting to come in the country legally have been
waiting for over 10 years!
Sisters Ellen Lamberjack and Andrea Inkrott are part of the Sisters of St. Francis in Tiffin, but the two make
their home in Archbold and work daily in behalf of families seeking citizenship. After they presented the basic
channels to citizenship, they explained the hurdles and posted the costs. We were shocked!
When Sylvia Titgemeyer, an immigration attorney came to the podium, she ex-
plained the immigration issue from the corporate side. The Napoleon native now
practicing in St. Louis, made it clear that again, costs are significant and the prob-
lems are complex.
After lunch Ed Yoder of Zion Mennonite Church in Archbold opened an after-
noon of heart-felt stories. Ed and his family were active in their church’s efforts
to resettle several immigrant families over the last several decades. With that ef-
fort came stories of struggle and triumph. He made one thing clear: the experi-
ence has positively impacted their entire family to this day.
Tears were shed as the 50 participants listened intently to the story of Fauzia, a
young immigrant mother here from Pakiston. Fauzia and her family left their lovely home in Pakistan and ar-
rived in our area with nothing. She feared for her life and the lives of her young family. As a Christian, she
was raised to believe women could get an education and make a difference. She tried. The price she paid was
to flee her home and resettle here in the States. Her hope is to make a long-distance difference by fund-raising
and building awareness of the fears and limitations of those she left behind.
Our classroom was full and we left with a much greater understand-
ing of the complexities of the immigration issues.
In this issue—
Page 1…..Now we Know! Immigration
Page 2-3 Milwaukee..Won Our Hearts
Page 4…..Fall 2016 Michigan Trip
Page 5….Fall 2016 One Day Seminar
Page 6….Spring 2017 Trip
Page 7-8….CLL Information, More Milwaukee pictures
**Forms for all activities are included on sepa-rate sheets of paper
All information (including trip and program forms) can be found online at:
www.NorthwestState.edu/
Sylvia Titgemeyer, Attorney
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A CITY THAT WON OUR HEARTS!
The late-April trip to Milwaukee is one we’ll be talking about for a long time to come. We didn’t go with a
full bus, maybe because some of you were thinking - “Milwaukee? What’s in Milwaukee?“ We who made
the trip would say, “Lots!”
We got started on the right foot with our
first two stops Sunday. We stopped for
brunch at Linton’s Enchanted Gardens near
Elkhart, Indiana. Most of us had never seen
a garden store quite like that one much less
had had brunch with the plants and birds in
a glassed-in greenhouse. And just two hours
up the road in St. John, Indiana we stopped
at the Passion of the Christ for a leg-
stretcher that was breath-taking. Sparked
by his desire to make a difference, a local entrepreneur acted on an idea to tell the “old, old story.” He
brought in over 60 semi loads of boulders to create the newest exhibit, a speaking Moses giving the com-
mandments on Mt. Sinai. The site has been famous for its stations of the cross featuring life-sized bronze
sculptures of Holy Week for some time. We were glad we made the stop and we still arrived right on time
for our sampler platters of German food at the famous Mader House in Milwaukee.
In each city we Lifelong Learners vis-
it, your coordinator shops months in
advance for a receptive in the city,
someone who makes a living hosting
out- of- town guests who arrive on
busses. We’ve had some wonderful
receptives over the years, but noth-
ing could top our good fortune in
Milwaukee with a receptive who did
her own guiding. Kay of Milwau-
kee’s KBC Tours had our visit so well-
planned that we could enjoy every
stop because she had us prepared. Her attention to detail and our curiosity made us the perfect match. We
stood on the warning track on the Milwaukee Brewer’s new stadium before we went to lunch at Miss Katie’s
Diner where President Clinton and German Chancellor Kohl have been and posters in the diner made it clear
that both Donald and Hillary had been there campaigning this spring! (continued on page 3)
Great brunch stop, Linton’s Enchanted Gardens, Elkhart, IN
Astounding life-sized sculptures at Passion of Christ, St. John, IN
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We learned a lot about the brewing industry in the city and even visited the Captain Frederick Pabst Man-
sion and the Historic Pabst Brewery. We shared a great experience on our noon-time river cruise before en-
joying a view of the city from the top floor of one of Milwaukee’s most historic hotel, The Pfister. Just when
we thought it couldn’t get much better, we finished our dinners and settled in for a show, Sirens of Song in
the Stackner Cabaret Theater downtown.
Our Wednesday in Madison was
highlighted by a visit to the Circus
Museum in Baraboo, the winter
home of the Ringling Circus. We
could gawk at leisure at the doz-
ens and dozens of hand-carved,
brightly- painted circus wagons
that used to house the perform-
ers and the animals in the majes-
tic circus parades. We never
reached an agreement on our
thoughts of Frank Lloyd Wright’s
Unitarian Meeting House, but we had plenty of time to discuss that tour in our historic farm house meal at
Quivey’s Grove.
We couldn’t leave the diverse city without a visit to their Freshwater Studies Institute right on the lake, a
breathtaking visit to the Basilica of St. Josaphat and lunch at a neighborhood family-run Polish restaurant.
Knowing we don’t like to come home to an empty refrigerator we finished with the soup and salad bar at the
Potawatomi Inn at Pokagon State Park in Angola.
Our Milwaukee travelers with “The Fonz” of Happy Days fame front and center
We awarded our luncheon cruise very high marks!
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Join us as we cross the
State Line September 19 and 20
On Monday and Tuesday, September 19 and 20 we will be heading north to the Ann Arbor, Lan-sing, Jackson, Chelsea, Michigan area. It will be a good opportunity to get away without a long bus ride.
Included in the overnight adventure is a tour of the now-shuttered Jackson Prison, the Jiffy Mix plant in Chelsea, a look at "the Big House” at the University of Michigan, lunch at a winery and an-other meal in a restored railroad car. And, did I mention our Tuesday meal at the Common Grill in Chelsea before we head on home? We have a hotel with a pool if you’d like to indulge, and we’ll have a step-on guide to point out highlights of both Ann Arbor and Lansing.
At Jackson we’ll take a journey through 179 years of Michi-gan corrections. They’ve promised seating throughout as we hear stories of wardens, guards, notorious scoundrels, corrup-tion, punishments, escapes and riots throughout our 2 ½ hour tour.
After we leave Jackson we’ll be in Lansing in just 45 minutes. There we’ll enjoy the Michigan State Museum, a col-lection of diversity. The second floor filled with restored autos highlights the automotive backbone of the state and another ar-
ea will bring us face to face with the mining industry so vital to the state’s economy.
Just to be clear we won’t tour the entire U. of M. stadium, but arrangements are being made to get inside the stadium for a look. We also will not tour the capitol building in Lansing, but we will go by. ( It just happens that we’ve had so many stadium tours lately, and capitol buildings as well, we thought this time we’d put more emphasis on some different things!)
We’ll cross the line into Michigan for only $340. per person based on two per room. Of course that includes everything: meals, tips, admissions, transportation and your room!
Make a call or two and plan to join us for the Fall Overnight to Jackson, Ann Arbor, and Lansing area. See the registration sheet included in this newsletter or go online to Northwest State Com-munity College Lifelong Learning.
ONLY $340
per person based on
double occupancy
Includes EVERYTHING!
PUR IC HIGA N®
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One Day Seminar
Friday, October 21, 2016
Come join us on campus at Northwest State and let’s spend a day taking a look at now and then. We’re still lining up the pre-senters for each of the four sessions, but topics we’re consider-ing discussing are the changes in farming, education, medicine, and politics.
We’ll setup an extra table so if you have something of long ago to share in one of these four topics; we’d invite you to bring it for display for the day.
Not so many years ago an 80-acre farm was the norm. Today, that’s part of history as giant planters and harvesters roll across the hundreds of acres under cultivation. We’ll even include a lesson on animals and the cost of some of that equipment we see going down our county’s roads.
In the 60’s parents could help their children with the math homework. Today, it’s an entirely new approach and most par-ents (and grandparents!) are left scratching their heads. And oh, what about the cursive writing controversy? In many schools the making of the loops that began pupils on the road to cursive writing has been completely eliminated.
In the medical world when babies were born years ago, hos-pitalized Moms had a week to recoup. Not today. Those Moms and their newborns are often at a community event in just a few days. What has made the many changes in health care?
With a major election only a few weeks after our gathering, maybe we’ll even look at the enormous chang-es on the campaign trail and the dollars now spent to get the vot-ers’ attention.
Save the day and as plans develop you’ll find the details on the College web site, your e-mail or the area newspapers. As always we’ll plan on registration and social time from 8:30 to 9:00 and then plan to start the program promptly at 9. To help the food ser-vice folks, be sure to make your reservation by Monday, October 17. See the registration form with this newsletter or go on-line and type in Northwest State Center for Lifelong Learning.
D(Now
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JOIN US ON A TRIP TO PITTSBURGH
APRIL 23-26, 2017
We’ll get a fresh look at Pittsburgh
and the surrounding area on our spring
trip in 2017. We have reduced the days to
4 and the overnights to 3 to cut costs and
help travelers with their swelling sched-
ules. Our receptive is very mindful that
too many steps and too much standing
can be hazardous to our health! And yes,
we’ll be staying in the same hotel all
three nights and eating well, of course!
When we arrive in Pittsburgh late Sun-
day afternoon, April 23, we will go to the
Duquesne Incline to enjoy a ride on a
century-old funicular, one of the few left
in the nation! And before we end day one we’ll enjoy dinner at LeMont Restaurant, a Five-Star Diamond
Award-Winning restaurant on Mount Washington overlooking the city skyline.
On Monday we’ll kick off the week in The Bost Building, for an introduction to the iron and steel history
and cultural heritage of Pittsburgh. We’ll enjoy an interactive presentation about the rise and fall of steel-
making in Pittsburgh and what it was like to work in a mill.
On Tuesday we’ll head east for a look at the National Memorial to commemorate a tragic moment in our
history. In Stoystown on Tuesday morning Sept. 11, 2001, the U.S. came under attack when four commercial
airliners were hijacked and used to strike targets on the ground. Because of the actions of the 40 passengers
and crew aboard one of the planes, Flight 93, the attack on the U.S. Capitol was thwarted. This site commem-
orates the bravery of these American citizens on that infamous day.
While we’re east of the city we’ll make a stop at the Johnstown Flood Museum which recreates the 1889
Flood with exhibits, artifacts and the Academy Award® winning film, The Johnstown Flood. Exhibits also
include “The Oklahoma House,” a pre-fabricated structure sent to Johnstown to house flood survivors.
Before we head for home on Wednesday afternoon we’ll visit the Nationality Classrooms at the University
of Pittsburgh’s famous Cathedral of Learning and enjoy a brief organ recital in the Heinz chapel on campus,
built by the founder of the H.J. Heinz Company, to honor his mother. It is renowned for its beautiful stained
glass windows with 391 identifiable people such as William Shakespeare and Florence Nightingale.
The total Pittsburgh trip is inclusive and includes your room, meals, transportation, admissions and tips.
That fee based on two per room is $725 per person. We hope you’ll look at your calendar and plan to join us.
And since family never knows what to get you for special occasions, maybe suggest cash for the upcoming
adventure with the Center for Lifelong Learning.
Pittsburgh trip is inclusive and includes your room, meals, transportation, admissions and
tips. That fee based on two per room is $725 per person.
We hope you’ll look at your calendar and plan to join us. And since family never knows
what to get you for special occasions, maybe suggest cash for the upcoming adventure
with the Center for Lifelong Learning.
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“Anyone who stops learning is old, whether at
twenty or eighty.
Anyone who keeps learning stays young.”
—Henry Ford
At the Harley Davidson Museum, we had
the opportunity to “try on” some bikes.
Joyce Erven had her eye on this mighty
machine.
Our inside look at the Milwaukee Brewers new ball park.
YOU’LL FIT RIGHT IN
This is YOUR Center for Lifelong
Learning. Your input is valuable.
Both the Michigan trip and the Pitts-
burgh trip and highlights were sugges-
tions from within our group. Others of
you have suggested some other day
trips and some longer trips with histori-
cal significance. We want to continue
to gather ideas to make the Center a
group you enjoy and one that makes
you want to invite others to join in.
We are always looking for new
names for our mailing list. Anyone
over 55 who is curious about life’s di-
versity is probably a good candidate for
the programming. Positive, thoughtful
people help make the group welcom-
ing. The group is extremely helpful to
one another, interested in one another
and flexible. Whether traveling or at-
tending an event as a single or with a
partner, it won’t take long to feel at
home.
CLASSIFIED: Because of the inspiration of the life-sized sculp-
tures on the Stations of the Cross that we enjoyed on our group trip to
Milwaukee, your Center’s coordinator Cecily has personally reserved
a bus for Thursday, September 8th and will take anyone who wants to
go on a one-day trip to the impressive Passion of Christ, exhibit. Fee
of $100 covers bus, brunch in Elkhart and evening soup and salad bar
at Potawatomi Inn, Pokagon State Park, and all tips. Call Cecily at
419.267.5502 if interested in the Thursday excursion leaving from
Archbold at 8 a.m. and returning about 8:30 p.m. (Note: This is not
a Northwest State Community College sponsored event)
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is making in northwest Ohio, visit the Northwest State
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on facebook to see the great stories and videos about stu-
dents, alumni and friends of NSCC!
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Datebook for Lifelong Learners
Friday, July 15 - Final Day for registration for Michigan Trip (if there is still room). Our receptive notes
that no individual refunds will be issued within 30 days of travel date
Monday, September 19, 2016—8:45 a.m. Bus leaves East Entrance Northwest State Community College
for Michigan Get-Away
Monday, October 17, 2016—Be sure you’re registered for Friday’s seminar at Northwest State
Friday, October 21, 2016—One-day Then & Now Gathering at Northwest State (East Entrance)
Before the end of December 2016 – Initial $300 deposit for Spring Trip to Pittsburgh due to the College
March 1, 2017 - Final Payment of $425 for the April Pittsburgh trip due to the College
Monday, April 3, 2017 – Final day to register for next Friday’s Seminar at Northwest State
Friday, April 7, 2017—Spring one-day Seminar at Northwest State( details coming this fall)
Thursday, April 13, 2017—Orientation for Spring Trip to Pittsburgh, 7 p.m. at the College
April 23-26, 2017—Spring Trip to Pittsburgh
NSCC Center for Lifelong Learning Contact Information
Coordinator Cecily Rohrs. E-mail [email protected] or phone 419-267-5502.
Checks always payable to NSCC (Northwest State Community College)
All mail to Center for Lifelong Learning, NSCC, 22300 State Route 34, Archbold, OH 43502
College Business Office phone Lynn 419-267-1312.
View photos of past events and get information on upcoming events at: Northwest State Community College Center for Lifelong Learning.
Find our Info at
www.NorthwestState.edu
1. Go to: www.NorthwestState.edu
2. Click on “Community” at the top of
the page in the tan banner
3. Click on the tab on the right that say
“Lifelong Learning”
NORTHWEST STATE